On the water and in the Air Force

Courtesy of the Harvard Gazette. For view the Gazette's
page, click here. This is one in a series
of profiles showcasing some of Harvard’s stellar
graduates.

When a recurring foot injury derailed Courtney Diekema’s
Harvard soccer career almost as soon as it started, she did what
savvy kids have been doing for millennia: She listened to her
mother.

Diekema’s mother suggested she try rowing, a nonimpact
sport in which her 6-foot, 1-inch height would be an asset.

Though she had never rowed before, Diekema fit right in. She was
already an athlete, which was a big boost, and women’s rowing
coach Liz O’Leary was used to training novices.

Diekema rapidly progressed, and in the spring of her junior year
helped the women’s heavyweight eight boat to win the Ivy
League championship. That sent her squad to the NCAA championships,
where it placed ninth. Her performance earned Diekema a second team
All-America designation.

“She’s wonderful,” O’Leary said.
“She has a great sense of humor. She’s motivated and
driven in a lot of ways. She has very high expectations of herself,
which is why she’s where she is.”

Diekema is again looking forward to the Ivy League championship.
She is hoping to help propel her team into the NCAAs and to push
herself into the ranks of the nation’s elite women rowers.
Two days after the NCAAs wrap up, Diekema will travel to Princeton,
N.J., to compete for a spot on the U.S. under-23 team and a trip to
the world championships in July. Her goal is to make the U.S.
national team and ultimately go to the 2016 Summer
Olympics in Rio.

To achieve that goal, the graduating senior will need the
understanding of her new employer: Uncle Sam.

After participating in Air
Force ROTC since her freshman year and serving as wing
commander last fall, Diekema will join the Air Force as a second
lieutenant upon graduation. She will join Air Force intelligence
and undergo nine months of training. If she makes the under-23
team, she hopes to join the Air Force’s World Class Athlete
Program, which would allow her to train full time in exchange for
extending her service commitment from four to six years.

Diekema came to rowing late, but she came to the military early.
Her grandfather was in military intelligence in the 1980s. She was
planning to attend the Air Force Academy before she found out she
had been accepted at Harvard.

“I like the idea of being part of something bigger than
myself,” Diekema said.

Diekema’s athleticism has roots at home as well, albeit in
the water rather than on it. Her parents were both swim coaches,
her sister was an All-American swimmer at Calvin College, and her
brother Jordan ’11 was a swimmer at Harvard.

Though Diekema, a government concentrator from Eliot House, is nervous about
the coming transition, she feels it’s time to strike out from
Harvard.

“I’m really excited and slightly terrified,”
Diekema said. “I’m kind of glad to know what I’ll
be doing for the next four years. Then I can make a decision to
continue … or not.”

With classes, rowing, and ROTC, Diekema’s four years were
busy. Her advice for incoming freshmen is to forget preconceived
notions of what they want to do and just explore what Harvard has
to offer.

“Try not to have any idea of what you think you want to
study,” Diekema suggested. “Just be really
open.”